Talk:IBM WebSphere Application Server

Software Purpose
So, what does this thing actually do? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 194.56.165.5 (talk) 12:40, 16 March 2011 (UTC)

The introduction has been changed many times since the comment above and its seems reasonable now. Is there anything more specific that would be helpful? Ian Robinson (talk) 10:14, 8 June 2018 (UTC)

WebSphere Version History Table
The top levels rows of this are helpful. I'm less convinced about the rows showing an incomplete list of Java EE component versions. Its an arbitrary subset. The complete set is better inspected in the product doc than a Wikipedia page. I'd recommend removing the table rows that contain Java EE components. Comments? Ian Robinson (talk) 11:40, 8 June 2018 (UTC)

I've made the links for the sources of the table (above the table) into external references (instead of embedded links). I've also removed the two external embedded links next to the WebSphere Application Server Community Edition entry further down as they are broken. I think there are now no external links embedded in the article. Can the 'external links' tag (dated October 2012) now be removed from the page? Laura Cowen (talk) 11:08, 15 June 2018 (UTC)

On June 12 the version table was updated for 8.5.5 and 9.0 to have the release date cells indicate the release date of the last fixpack release, but all other rows show the initial .0 release dates which is totally inconsistent. I don't think the release date should have been updated. Thoughts? 9:41pm, 25th June 2018 (EDT) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.237.132.128 (talk) 01:41, 26 June 2019 (UTC)

WebSphere Application Server Community Edition and Open Liberty
How about the WebSphere Application Server Community Edition? It is WebSphere but using the Apache Geronimo.

WebSphere Application Server Community Edition is an Open Source application server that can be downloaded free of charge from IBM. IBM also provides fee-based support for this product. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.24.105.235 (talk) 21:22, 12 September 2007 (UTC)

The article does link to the WAS CE wikipedia page but its relationship to WebSphere App Server is historic and it does not share the same codebase. Much more currently, the Open Liberty project was created in 2017 and ongoing development of Liberty happens there - so this is the forward-looking open source version of WebSphere Liberty. Since this was done in the WAS V9 timeframe I added a reference to that project in the Version 9 section of the article. It may be better though to have a separate section on Open Liberty - any suggestions? Ian Robinson (talk) 10:35, 8 June 2018 (UTC)

Architecture
There is a valid use for this article. It can be salvaged.

I wish there was a section that describes the architecture of this product, specifically the concentric ring model of assigned memory, application sandbox memory, and application configuration files. Stephen Charles Thompson (talk) 17:39, 12 June 2009 (UTC)

Giant advert moved to talk
I'm moving a large chunk of marketing-speak here from the article. Please don't move it back in it's current form and try to be much more NPOV. As it was written it was a giant advertisement:

{{quotation|{{advert|section}}

Administrator benefits
Many businesses run multiple server farms but wish to consolidate them into a single smaller server farm. This is because most server farms are underutilizied or over provisioned. The boxes are typically running at 10% load which is quite costly and is not flexible. For example, one server farm goes hot and maxes out while the farm in the next room is still basically idle at 10%. XD allows administrators to define a single cluster (a node group) then monitor the workload and dynamically decide which boxes in the node group should host which application in order to meet these goals. If application A has a current response time of 1.5 seconds, XD will move resources away from applications B and C to increase the power dedicated to A and decrease its response time. XD can also predict that A will likely exceed its response time in 10 minutes based on a trend and react in anticipation of the event. This greatly simplifies the life of an administrator and allows the machines to be more efficiently used than a conventional multiple, independent farm of farms approach. XD also offers options to generate various email alerts when conditions are exceeded. It can also restart servers when they appear to have a memory leak, or after X requests.

WebSphere Partition Facility
Traditional Java EE applications work well for a large class of applications. The class can be broadly categorized as applications that run in a stateless symmetric cluster in front of a database:


 * All the cluster members can perform any task at any time.
 * The application is stateless.
 * The application is modal, such that it only performs work synchronously in response to a client request which can be received using http://IIOP or JMS.

There are other applications that do not work well in such an environment, for example, an electronic trading system in a bank. Such applications typically use performance enhancing techniques such as partitioning, multi-threading, and write-through caching. These are applications that can exploit asymmetric clustering. An asymmetric cluster is essentially the opposite of a symmetric cluster:


 * Applications can declare named partitions at any point while they are running, partitions are highly available, mobile within the cluster, and usually only run on a single cluster member at a time.
 * Incoming work for a partition is routed to the cluster member hosting the partition.
 * The application is amodal. Partitions have a lifecycle of their own and can start background threads or alarms as well as respond to incoming events whether they are IIOP/HTTP or JMS/foreign messages.

WebSphere XD offers a new set of APIs called the WebSphere Partition Facility (WPF). These APIs allow applications that require an asymmetric cluster to be deployed on a Java EE server.

ObjectGrid
The ObjectGrid is the first piece of the IBM distributed caching framework. V6 of XD shipped with support for local Java object caching as well as peer-to-peer caching with asynchronous data push/invalidation. It is designed as a small footprint, to install customer extensible framework for caching objects. All aspects of the core framework have plugin points. This allows customers to add function as well as allow IBM to extend it in future product levels. It is designed to run independent of WebSphere. This does not mean it won't integrate with WebSphere 6.0 XD -- it will. But it will also work on older versions of the application server, Tomcat servers, and competitive application servers. In a very limited sense, memcached performs some of the same functions as ObjectGrid

ObjectGrid is intended to compete against the other distributed cache products on the market. It currently requires only a 1.4 level JDK from any vendor. Version 2 of the ObjectGrid is currently under development for shipping in XD 6.0.1. It will add significant function to the component as well as widen JDK level support. The intent is to allow customers to build large grids of JVMs into which they can connect applications and store objects at various qualities of service. The grid is being designed to scale to thousands of JVMs and hold a large quantity of data.

Compute Grid
Also known as WebSphere Batch, WebSphere XD also offers a Java Batch processing system called Compute Grid. This was first introduced in XD version 6.1. Compute Grid is deployed as an additional feature of a WebSphere Network environment. It provides a number of features that help you create, execute and manage batch jobs. The features include: an XML-based job control language (xJCL), batch programming model, job scheduler, and batch container. }}Toddst1 (talk) 19:22, 10 August 2009 (UTC)


 * Todd, I couldn't find the moved content in your talk archives. Oh wait...there it is right here on THIS talk page at the bottom of the page in a collapsed view. Stephen Charles Thompson (talk) 17:33, 4 December 2012 (UTC)

merge of WebSphere Liberty Profile z/OS
WebSphere Liberty Profile z/OS was recently created but I'm not seeing how it warrants a dedicated article. A brief section on the liberty profile and how it differs from ND would be appropriate here though. Even the title doesn't make much sense since Liberty Profile is runable on multiple platforms including Mac, Windows, and multiple Linuxes in addition to z/OS.--RadioFan (talk) 11:21, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
 * Are there no objections to this selective merger?--RadioFan (talk) 14:35, 5 May 2012 (UTC)
 * Since there have been no objections, a highly selective merge has been completed.--RadioFan (talk) 22:48, 7 May 2012 (UTC)

Incorrect information on supported technologies
At least for Websphere 7 the mentioned supported technologies are incorrect. Haven't checked the remaining information offered and dismissed the page as irrelevant at first sight. Websphere 7 is Java EE 5, not Java EE 6 as can be found in IBM's online reference: http://pic.dhe.ibm.com/infocenter/wasinfo/v8r5/index.jsp?topic=/com.ibm.websphere.base.doc/ae/rovr_specs.html 2001:980:5966:1:CC20:2A1E:FE2A:3BBD (talk) 19:59, 12 December 2012 (UTC)

This looks to have been corrected - hopefully soon after the comment above! Ian Robinson (talk) 10:49, 8 June 2018 (UTC)

Liberty version mismatch
It seems liberty version is year.xxx.yyy.month of release, and not quarters. Zephyr59710FR (talk) 14:59, 7 February 2024 (UTC)